This application claims priority to foreign French patent application No. FR 1361794, filed on Nov. 28, 2013, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The invention relates to radio antennas, and more particularly to antennas of portable devices that must be miniaturised even when the operating frequency bands are relatively low, for example around 500 MHz.
Miniaturisation of an antenna consists in providing antenna dimensions of less than around one sixth of the wavelength, and the efficiency of the antenna is reduced due to the fact of these small dimensions. In fact, a dipole antenna optimised from the point of view of efficiency should have dimensions in the order of the half-wavelength, i.e., for example, 15 cm for 500 MHz. A miniaturised antenna would instead have a length of 5 centimetres in its largest dimension, more suitable for a portable communication device that must be capable of being handheld.
Problems encountered in antenna miniaturisation include interactions between the antenna and its immediate environment, and one object of the invention is to provide an antenna geometry that minimises these interactions, which would be detrimental to the efficiency of the antenna.
Meander antennas have already been proposed in which the antenna is formed by a conducting wire folded over itself in order to retain a sufficient total wire length (close to one quarter of the wavelength), while restricting the overall size.
The 1 shows the principle of a monopole meander antenna, made up of a wire F mounted above a ground plane M and folded over itself. The height above the ground plane is around three times less than the total length of the unfolded wire.
Antenna structures formed by etching of printed circuit boards have also been proposed. The conducting wires of the antenna and the ground plane are etched onto the surface of the board. The conducting wires can be etched on one surface of the board and the ground plane on a different surface of the board. The height is particularly reduced since it is limited to the thickness of the board and the conducting layers deposited on the board.
Finally, slot antennas have been proposed in the prior art, in which the electromagnetic radiation is generated in an open, elongated slot in a flat conducting structure etched onto one surface of a printed circuit, the other surface of which forms a ground plane. The wider the slot, the lower the operating frequency can be.
However, the miniaturised antenna structures proposed to date have reduced radiation efficiency, i.e. a low ratio of the received electric power (which is the power of the source for a suitable antenna) to the radiated power, when the antenna is placed in an unfavourable environment.
The antenna according to the invention is a monopole radio antenna including a ground plane and an etched conducting surface, the etched conducting surface including a structure of conducting lines and a signal injection point, characterised in that the structure of conducting lines comprises a first meander conducting line having multiple strands elongated in a first direction, a second meander conducting line symmetrical to the first conducting line in relation to a median plane perpendicular to the first direction, the two lines starting from the injection point, and a common surface connected to the ends of the conducting lines distant from the injection point.
The structure according to the invention evens out the distribution of the high electric fields better than enabled by a single-meander antenna of the prior art, especially in the case where the antenna is enclosed in a hood of plastic material (ABS), which will often be the case with telecommunication antennas associated with handheld portable electronic devices.
The multiple strands of the two meander conducting lines preferably join one another along the median plane, i.e., for each meander, an elongated strand from one of the lines joins an elongated strand of the other line.
The conducting lines each include a plurality of strands (at least two and preferably at least eight) elongated in the direction perpendicular to the median plane.
In a simple version, the antenna is entirely plane. In an even more compact version, the parts of the antenna are folded, for example in order to assume in part the shape of generally parallelepiped casing containing the antenna.
The antenna is formed on a, preferably flexible, printed circuit, or it is made up of a metal plate cut according to the required pattern of lines and ground plane. This plate can remain flat or can be matched to the required shape after cutting.
Other characteristics and advantages of the invention will become apparent from a reading of the detailed description which follows, given with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
The antenna is formed by a conducting surface etched onto a single surface of the printed board. The board is made, for example, from a plastic material (epoxy resin in general) and the conducting surface may be a layer of copper deposited on the board. However, the antenna could also be formed by cutting a metal plate without a plastic substrate.
The conducting surface includes a ground plane M and, in the same plane, an etched conducting structure which includes a single-meander, continuous conducting line. The conducting line includes a first elongated strand 14 extending parallel to an edge of the ground plane, in the direction of the width of the board (according to the direction of the arrow 16), with a constant narrow interval, for example 1 millimetre, between the first strand and the ground plane. This first strand starts from a point located in the middle of the width of the board, a point which forms a signal injection point for the antenna (for transmission) or signal reception point (for reception). The injection or reception point 18 is connected to a high-frequency transmission line (coaxial transmission cable or microstrip line) furthermore connected to the telecommunication circuitry (not shown) contained in the casing and located, for example, above the radio antenna board. This circuitry may include an integrated circuit for processing a radio-frequency signal.
As well as the first strand starting from the injection point, the continuous conducting line in
A ground plane M occupies the lower part of the printed board, over a large surface area, in this example around half of the surface area of the board.
Each of the conducting lines comprises a plurality of parallel strands 30 in series, oriented perpendicular to the median line 24 and interconnected by 180° elbows. The elongated parallel strands are separated by narrow intervals, the width of which is of the same order of magnitude or is equal to the width of the strands themselves. They extend between one of the edges of the surface of the board and the median line. The 180° elbows are located on the ends of each strand, on one side along the median line and on the other side along one of the lateral edges of the board, the left edge for the strands of the left conducting line, the right edge for the strands of the right conducting line. There are a plurality of strands, preferably at least eight strands, per line. In the example shown, there are eleven strands.
Preferably, but this is not obligatory, the elbowed ends of the strands of the left conducting line can be joined to the elbowed ends of the right conducting line. This is what is shown in
The first strand (below the meander lines in
Finally, the last strand of the left line (the strand at the top of the figure) ends on a common conducting surface 22 occupying a significant part of the board (at least 10%). The place where the last strand joins the common conducting surface is preferably the end of the strand on the side opposite to the median line, i.e. on the left edge and the right edge of the board respectively.
The common conducting surface 22 is separated from the last strand of each line (except where these strands join it) by a narrow interval which is preferably the same as the intervals between strands of each line.
The interval between strands and the interval between the last strand and the common conducting surface may be around 1 millimetre. The interval between the ground plane M and the first strand of each line may have the same value or may be greater if necessary in order to place the signal injection point 18 there, as shown in
The antenna could thus be formed by cutting a metal plate rather than by etching a conducting layer deposited on a plastic board.
The first curve Aa, indicated by dotted lines, shows the variation in efficiency with frequency for an antenna from
The second curve Ab, indicated by unbroken lines, shows the variation for an antenna from
These curves show that there is a frequency or a range of frequencies at which the efficiency is maximum. The efficiency reaches around 90%. It is slightly higher for the antenna from
The third curve Ba, indicated by dotted lines, shows the variation in efficiency as a function of frequency for the antenna from
The fourth curve Bb, indicated by unbroken lines, shows the variation in efficiency as a function of frequency for the antenna from
This can be explained by the fact that the areas of high electric field remain better distributed in the immediate vicinity of the antenna and are less influenced by the presence of the hood which covers the antenna. From this point of view, the antenna structure from
In the entire description above, the antenna has been assumed to be completely plane. However, the structure formed by the ground plane M, the conducting lines 30 and the common surface 22 can also be folded in order to be accommodated in a space with a length and/or width smaller than the length and width of the plane antenna. For example, it can be provided that the fold is effected by keeping:
the ground plane mainly on a main front surface of a parallelepiped,
the common surface 22 mainly on an opposite rear surface,
and the conducting lines 30 mainly on a small side of the parallelepiped, between the two opposite surfaces.
When the antenna is thus folded in part, the orientations of the strands and the symmetry as explained with regard to a plane antenna will be considered to remain valid, but by then considering that the antenna is hypothetically unfolded in order to consider these orientations.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13 61794 | Nov 2013 | FR | national |
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6184836 | Ali | Feb 2001 | B1 |
7106253 | Yuanzhu | Sep 2006 | B2 |
20090108996 | Day | Apr 2009 | A1 |
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102354804 | Feb 2012 | CN |
1441415 | Jul 2004 | EP |
2003142931 | May 2003 | JP |
2012108071 | Aug 2012 | WO |
Entry |
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A. Khaleghi, et al., “A Dual Band Back Coupled Meanderline Antenna for Wireless LAN Applications”, 2005 IEEE 61st vehicular Technolog Conference, May 30-Jun. 1, 2005, pp. 226-229, vol. 1, IEEE, Piscataway, NJ, USA, XP010855386. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150145729 A1 | May 2015 | US |